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writings Mr. Nichols's professional labours and varied erudition had acquainted him with.

NATURALISTS' CALENDAR.

Mean Temperature... 40 · 82.

November 19.

CHRONOLOGY.

On this day in 1703 died, in the Bastille at Paris, an unknown prisoner, celebrated throughout Europe under the appellation of the Man with the Iron Mask; he had been confined, for state reasons, from the year 1661. There have been various disquisitions and controversies respecting his identity, but a recent work seems to have rendered it probable, that he was an Italian diplomatist who counteracted certain projects of Louis XIV., and was therefore condemned, by that monarch's despotism, to perpetual imprisonment, in an iron mask, for the concealment of his features.

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web. Had I not accounted for this natural circumstance, I should certainly have considered it as a phenomenon worthy of anxiety.

123. "The Spectre." A young lady in Bedfordshire, on coming of age, was promised by her father a present of any thing she chose to accept at his hand. She said, A skeleton! Her choice was gratified-a skeleton was sent for from London, and placed in a case in a room accessible to her. The room has ever since gone by the name of the "Stranger's Room." "Have you seen? or will you see, the stranger?" is the question put to all visitors. The daughter of Herodias seems to have scarcely exceeded the eccentric taste of this young lady.

136. "St. Agnes' Eve." After fasting the whole of the day, upon going to bed an egg must be filled with salt, and eaten, which occasions a great thirst. The vessel the female dreams of drinking from, according to situation and circumstances, denotes who will be her husband.

This charm for the ague, on " St. Agnes' Eve," is customary to be said up the chimney, by the eldest female in the family

"Tremble and go!

First day shiver and burn:
Tremble and quake!

Second day shiver and learn:
Tremble and die!

Third day never return."

179. "Bears" are seen on the Stock Exchange in human shape, natural ones are kept by friseurs to supply grease for the hair. The Black Bear in Piccadilly, Taylor's Bear in Whitechapel, the White Bear, and the Bear and Ragged Staff, as a punster would say, are bear-able enough; but, I reprehend the "Dancing Bears being led through the streets to perform antics for money. Two have appeared this month. Each with two monkeys, a camel, dromedary, and organ. Travellers have told of their sagacity; we believe them: but, that bears are made to stand upon hot iron, and undergo the severest discipline before they are fit for public exhibition, is a truth which harrows the feeling, and makes me wish the dancing bears unmuzzled, and let loose upon those who have the guidance of their education. The ursa major of the literary hemisphere, Dr. Johnson, might have been a match for them.

207, "St. Blase." He seems to have

neglected the protecting the "Woolcombers." Since the introduction of machinery, by Arkwright and others, very little cloth is manufactured by hand. The woolcomber's greasy and oily wooden horse, the hobby of his livelihood, with the long teeth and pair of cards, are rarely seen. When scribblers, carders, billies, and spinning jennies, came into use, the wheel no longer turned at the cottage door, but a revolution among the working classes gave occasion for soldiers to protect the mills-time, however, has ended this strife with wool, and begun another with cotton,

246. "Pancake Day." It is a sine qua non at "Tedbury Mop," before a maid servant is wholly qualified for the farmer's kitchen, that she make apple fritters, and toss them without soot, or spoiling the batter.

348. "Sadler's Wells." It closed this season (1826) with a real benefit for Mrs. Fitzwilliam, October 2d. The new feature has been the horse-racing, in the open air, represented as at Newmarket. Boards were erected on every side, to conceal the race from the public in general, and ensure novelty to the play-going folks in particular. To give publicity to this amusement, the high-mettled racers, with riders, flags and bugles, in proper costume, paraded the environs daily, and distributed bills descriptive of cups, plate, bets, and other taking articles of jockeyship, which took place at evening. The thing did not take so much money as wished.

361. "St. Patrick's Day" being my natal day, though not of Erin's clime, I never fail dedicating a large plum pudding to his saintship; round my table the "olive branches" spread, and I make this record to encourage all persons to do the same, in remembrance of their parent's solicitude, and the prospective harmony of the

young.

402. "Good Friday." The bun so fashionable, called the Sally Lunn, originated with a young woman of that name in Bath, about thirty years ago. She first cried them, in a basket with a white cloth over it, morning and evening. Dalmer, a respectable baker and musician, noticed her, bought her business, and made a song, and set it to music in behalf of "Sally Lunn." This composition became the street favourite, barrows were made to distribute the nice cakes, Dalmer profited thereby, and retired; and, to this day, the Sally Lunn cake, not unlike the hotcross

bun in flavour, claims preeminence in all the cities in England.

423. Lifting" is a custom practised with hurdles among shepherds, in the South Downs, at their marriages. The bride and bridegroom are carried round a flock of sheep; a fleece is put for their seat, and may-horns, made of the rind of the sycamore tree, are played by boys and girls. There is another sort of" lifting," however; I have seen a tale-bearer in the village tossed in a blanket by the maids, as it is represented in " Don Giovanni in London," a scene in the King's Bench. I am, Sir, Your's sincerely,

MEMORANDA II.

JEHOIADA.

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507. "The Martin." It is considered a presage of good, for this bird to build its nest in the corner of the bedroomwindow; and particularly so, should the first inhabitants return in the season. know it to be true, that a pair of martins built their nest in the curtains of a bed belonging to Mrs. Overton, of Loverrall, Yorkshire. The nest was suffered to remain unmolested, and access given to it from the air. Six successive seasons the old birds revisited their chosen spot, brought forth their young, and enjoyed their peace, till the death of their most kind benefactress; when a distribution of the furniture taking place, it dislodged the tenants of the wing, which to each of them was not all Mihi Beati Martini"My eye, Betty Martin."

570. "Milkmaids' garland." After I had sailed up the river Wye, aud arrived at Chepstow-castle, my attention was arrested by one of the prettiest processions I remember to have enjoyed. It consisted of milkmaids dancing and serenading round an old man, whose few gray hairs were crowned by a wreath of wild flowers; he held a blossomy hawthorn in his right hand, and bore a staff, with cowslips and bluebells, in his left. A cow's horn hung across his shoulders. which he blew on arriving at a hoy" The youths and lasses were more thirty in number. Their arms, and "

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and necks, were surrounded by clusters of lilies of the valley, and wild roses. Then came an apple-cheeked dame with a lowcrowned, broad-brim hat; she wore spectacles, mittens were drawn up to her elbows, her waist trim, a woollen apron bound it, her petticoat short, blue worsted stockings, a high-heeled pair of shoes with silver buckles, and a broad tongue reposing on each instep. In one hand she held a brass kettle, newly scoured, it was full of cream; in the other, a basket of wood strawberries. To whoever came up to her with a saucer or basin, she gave a portion of her cream and fruit, with the trimmest curtsey I ever saw made by a dainty milkwoman betwixt earth and sky. She was "Aunt Nelly," and her "Bough Bearer," called “Uncle Ambrose," was known for singing a song," "Twas on one moonshiny night," which his defective pronunciation lisped meaun sheeiney." Ambrose strummed an instrument in his turn, partly harp, and partly hirdy-girdy. Six goats, harnessed in flowers, carried utensils in milking and butter making; and the farmer of the party rode on a bull, also tastily dressed with the produce of the fields and hedges. A cheese and a hatchet were suspended behind him, and he looked proudly as he guided the docile animal to the public-house, into which the milkmaids and their sweethearts went, quickened in their motions by the cat-gut, which made stirring sounds up stairs. The flowery flag was thrust upwardly into the street, facing the iron bridge; and, getting again into the fisherman's boat, I sailed and loitered down the banks of the river, charmed with what I had seen, felt, and understood. Of the milkmaids, Miss Thomas of Landcote was the darkest, the neatest, and the tallest-she stood only five feet, ten inches high.

692. "Kiss in the ring." The kissing crust' is that part of the loaf which is slightly burnt, and parted from the next loaf: hungry children who go home from the baker's, know best what it is, by the sly bits they filch from that part denominated the kissing crust.'

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807. "Buy a Broom!" Since Bishop harmonised this popular cry, the Flemish girls cry Buy a brush? but a greater t novelty has arisen in some of them singhag glees, quartets, and quintets in the satieets. The tune is unconcordant, slow, favouigrave; these warblers walk in a line The centre, with their hands crossed

end "

tures."

before their stomachs. Their simple attitude, together with their sunny cast, and artless glance, render them objects of pity; but the pence fall not so plentily to them as to the real John Bull, straightforward songs of the young weavers that go about with the model of a loom in work, fixed to the top of a rod five feet high.

839. "French pulpit." The pulpit at Union Chapel, Islington, is made of beautiful grained "Honduras mahogany;" and that of St. Pancras, New-road, of the farfamed "Fairlop oak."-Wesley and Whitefield were contented to emerge in their first career from the hogsheads of a grocer in Moorfields.

858. "Copenhagen-house." This year, the Spanish and Italian refugees have resorted to this house in great numbers, and played many famous matches at ball. Nothing can be more retired than the garden formed into bowers for visitersif the building mania should not recover, age will give the young plantations beauty, pleasure, and effect. Two new roads are made near Copenhagen-house; the one, leading from Kentish-town to Holloway, the other, from the latter to Pentonville. At "the Belvidere" racket is much played, and archery practised at "White Conduit-house." It is gratifying that the labours of the Every-Day Book are not in vain-the "Conduit" spoken of in vol. ii. col. 1203 has undergone repair; it is hoped, it will be enclosed by the proprietors as one of the new relics of venerable antiquity.

1435. "Beadles." The beadle of Camberwell is a lineal descendant of Earl Withrington, of the same name so celebrated in the battle of Chevy Chase. JEHOIADA.

NATURALISTS' CALENDAR. Mean Temperature... 40 25.

November 20.

Edmund. King and Martyr.*

OFFENSIVE BARBERS.

On the 20th of November, 1746, fiftyone barbers were convicted before the commissioners of excise, and fined in the penalty of twenty pounds each, for having in their custody hair-powder not made

• See vol. i. col. !493.

of starch, contrary to act of parliament; and, on the 27th of the same month, fortynine other barbers were convicted of the like offence, and fined in the same penalty.*

ROMAN STATIONS AT PANCRAS AND
PENTONVILLE.

To the Editor of the Every-Day Book. Sir,-The following observations have been the result of a visit to the site of the undoubted Roman camp at Pentonville, and the conjectural remains at St. Pancras. Respecting the former, I have been able to ascertain, that in the course of the year 1825 a labourer, who was occupied in digging in the prætorium, turned up a considerable quantity of arrow heads; and shortly afterwards, another labourer, digging a few yards to the south of the same spot, for materials to mend a road, uncovered a pavement of red tiles, about sixteen feet square, each tile being about an inch and a half thick, and about six inches square; they were mostly figured, and some had "strange characters upon them:" unfortunately, the discoverer had neither taste nor curiosity, and they were consigned to the bottom of a deep road.t Respecting the 66 Brill" (at Pancras) I have examined the ground, and find that S. G. (p. 1347,) is incorrect in stating the prætorium was perfect, half of it having been converted into bricks some months ago; and the brickmakers inform me, that nothing was found, not even a tile or brass coin. I will extract a little respecting this camp from a work of some authority, viz. The Environs of

London.

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London; here were the quarters of M. Crassus, the quæstor; here was Cominus ; there the Gaulish princes, &c. &c. It is but justice to Dr. Stukely's memory to mention, that this account of Cæsar's camp was not printed in his life-time. As he withheld it from the public, it is probable he was convinced that his imagination had carried him too far, on this subject. Dr. S. remarks, that the vallum thrown up in the civil war was in the fields next the duke of Bedford's: he adds, that it was levelled after the Restoration, and that scarcely a trace of it was (when he wrote) visible, notwithstanding Cæsar's camp remained in so perfect a state after an interval of 1800 years. Mr. Lysons does not suppose, that the entrenchment at the Brill was thrown up by the Londoners in 1642, since the name denotes something more ancient; but it certainly appears, by the diurnals published at the time, that entrenchments and rampar were thrown up in the fields near P cras-church, during the civil war thinks it not improbable, that the heated areas, above-mentioned, near the church, were the sites of the vicarage house, which are mentionel of the parish of Pancras This is certainly the most pre die conclusion, and far serio to the wild chimeras of the lea ned doctor. I will concl" this slight, and, I am aware, imperfect view of the various opinions, for and art, by observing, that I resided in Somers-town and its neighborhood for a considerable period; I carefully watched every excavation made for sewers, tond uions for houses, chapels, No, but i never heard of any discoveries having been made. The place lies too low to have even been frequented by the ns, more especially when the vioof the river of Wells is considered, .ch must have descended from the hills ka torrent, and have flooded the whole the neighbourhood of Somers-town, Battic-bridge,&c."

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Mr. Lysons, in that work, treats the id of a camp having been made near spot as quite conjectural, and that Dr. Stukely's imagination pursuit of a favourite hypothesis, w sometimes enable him to see more t other antiquaries; leaving the langu of conjecture, the Dr. points out the dis position of the troops, and the tation of each general's tent, with as much confidence as if he had himself been in the camp. Here was Cæsar prætorium; here was stationed Mand brace, king of the Rn gany

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4, 1825.

I am, Sir, yours, &c.

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belous, that the prætorium of 'd be placed in a swampy, on advantageous 'position

low situ na wain se on the ground, ou W ich St. Pancras-church/ stands, is given to % 5. ve prince; another circum stance is against the doctor's hypothesis, that was a Roman cang, a running streain thro

it.

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Towards the latter end of the seventeenth century, an entertainment was instituted, on the 22d of November, in commemoration of her, by many of the first rank in the kingdom; which was continued annually for a considerable time A splendid entertainment was provided at Stationers'-hall, which was constantly preceded by a performance of vocal and instrumental music, by the most capital performers. This feast is represented by Mr. Motteux, in 1691, as "one of the genteelest in the world; there are no formalities nor gatherings like as at others, and the appearance there is splendid." The words, which were always an excomium on their patroness, were set by Purcell, Blow, and others of the greatest eminence; and it became the fashion for writers of all ranks to celebrate saint Cecilia. Besides the odes to her by Dryden, and Pope, Addison, and Yalden, employed their talents on this subject. We have also odes to saint Cecilia by Shadwell, D'Urfey, and some still more indifferent poets. It appears by Mr. Motteux, that there were in 1691 "admirable coneerts in Charles-street and York-buildings."

tit On the anniversary of St. Cecilia, in ha 697, a sermon was preached at St. satie favour

end " tures."

Butler's Chronological Exercises. See vol. i. col. 1495.

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Bride's church by Dr. Brady, which he published under the title of "Church Music Vindicated." The last account discovered by Mr. Nichols, of any entertainment to her memory at Stationers'hall, is in Mr. Hughes's ode in 1703. The festivity appears to have been also celebrated at Oxford, and to have been continued there longer. There are two odes to St. Cecilia; one, in 1707, composed by Mr. Purcell, the other, in 1708, by Dr. Blow, "both performed at St. Mary-hall, in Oxon, by Mr. Saunders and Mr. Court, assisted by the best voices and bands." Mr. Addison's ode was performed there in 1699; and he has “a song," without date, on the same occasion.*

CECILIAN SOCIETY.

To the Editor of the Every-Day Book." The "Cecilian Society," established in 1785 by a few individuals, has continued, to the present day, to meet once a week for rehearsal, and once a fortnight for the public performance of vocal and instrumental music, chiefly sacred, by Handel; occasionally relieved by popular modern composition.

This society has been the school of eminent composers and performers: such as Barthelomon, Everett, Purkis, Banner, Busby, Griffin, Russel, Miss Bolton, Jacobs, Miss Gray, and many others; among whom are the brothers, the Mr. Nightingales, so highly esteemed in the musical world for their professional talent, and irreproachable demeanour.

The venerable president, Mr. Z. Vincent, is one of the old school of harmonists, and a man of letters. His heart and soul are identified in Handel's oratorios, and his judgment continues unimpaired. A Mr. Edwards is another instance of attachment to the society, he having been a member upwards of twenty years. The great "unity" that has prevailed, and still prevails, in this society, is an example worthy of a niche in the Every-Day Book. Their posent performances are held at the "Albion Hall," Moorfields, and well attended by the issue of "tickets." In honour of the day, a grand miscellaneous concert is annally performed; many celebrated professicals attend, and the lovers of harmony neve fail of having a high treat.

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